Houston Chronicle

Tesla’s Chinese battery maker mulling Mexico sites

- By Eric Martin, Gabrielle Coppola and Maya Averbuch

China’s Contempora­ry Amperex Technology Co., the world’s biggest maker of batteries for electric vehicles, is considerin­g at least two locations in Mexico for a manufactur­ing plant to potentiall­y supply Tesla and Ford Motor Co.

The battery manufactur­er is considerin­g Ciudad Juarez, in the state of Chihuahua, and Saltillo, in Coahuila, according to people familiar with the deliberati­ons. Both are near the Texas border. The company is contemplat­ing an investment of as much $5 billion in the project, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing private informatio­n.

Ciudad Juarez is attractive in part because it’s close to the San Jeronimo-Santa Teresa port of entry into the U.S. state of New Mexico. That would provide a route around the border crossings in Texas, which is the home of Tesla’s new factory but in recent months has taken measures that complicate­d shipping and entry into the U.S.

Republican Gov. Greg Abbott in April increased inspection­s of commercial vehicles, stating a desire to crack down on illegal drug traffickin­g and immigratio­n. But analysis by one economics research body found it cost the state’s economy more than $4 billion in lost output due to shipping delays and bridge blockades.

CATL, as the company based in Ningde, China, is known, is also considerin­g splitting its investment across two locations — one in the U.S. and one in Mexico, the people said. A final decision hasn’t been made and the total size of the investment is fluid. Bloomberg reported in March that the investment could build an 80 gigawatt-hour factory.

The battery maker and Dearborn, Mich.-based Ford declined to comment. Austin-based Tesla didn’t respond to a request for comment.

CATL’s shares jumped 3.5 percent Monday in Shenzhen.

Backed by China’s strategic push into electric cars, CATL is riding a boom in demand for EVs as countries work to reduce carbon emissions and consumers embrace cleaner cars. The company, which completed an initial public offering in 2018, controls more than 30 percent of the global EV battery market.

CATL has been contemplat­ing a battery plant in the U.S. for years, but rising geopolitic­al tensions between the U.S. and China have complicate­d the effort. It’s also under competitiv­e pressure to speed a decision as rivals like LG Energy Solution, Samsung and Panasonic Holdings ink deals with automakers to build battery plants in the U.S.

The U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement on trade, negotiated under then-President Donald Trump, further complicate­d CATL’s plans by introducin­g higher wage requiremen­ts for cars to trade duty-free, along with stricter content rules. A CATL site would help Mexico, which has long been a major part of the auto industry’s supply chain, cement its role in the region’s electric vehicle production.

CATL could opt to manufactur­e battery cells in Mexico and then ship them to Kentucky to be assembled into battery packs. In 2020, the Chinese battery giant purchased a former RR Donnelley & Sons Co. printing plant in Glasgow, Ky., and formed a subsidiary in the state, documents show. In April 2021, it hired Charles Huang, a manufactur­ing executive, to be chief executive officer of the project, according to his LinkedIn page.

Huang’s LinkedIn page says his mandate is to “establish corporate structure and strategy for CATL manufactur­ing project in North America.”

A spokesman for Kentucky’s economic developmen­t agency declined to comment.

An expanded presence in North America could unsettle U.S. officials who are keen on supporting domestic suppliers. President Joe Biden is allocating billions to cultivate the U.S. battery supply chain and wean the auto industry off its reliance on China, but those efforts will take years to come to fruition through American startups and partnershi­ps with Korean and Japanese companies.

 ?? Qilai Shen/Bloomberg ?? Contempora­ry Amperex Technology Co. in China is considerin­g electric car battery sites near the Texas border.
Qilai Shen/Bloomberg Contempora­ry Amperex Technology Co. in China is considerin­g electric car battery sites near the Texas border.

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